Alastair Reynolds
Alastair Reynolds was born in 1966 in Barry, South Wales.
He spent his early years in Cornwall, moved back to Wales and on to university in
Newcastle, doing Physics and Astronomy. Then it was on to a PhD in St Andrews, Scotland.
In 1991, he moved to Holland, where he met his partner Josette, and worked as ESA Research Fellow
before his post-doctoral work at Utrecht University.

Hard science fiction, and space opera, are styles of SF that tend to work better at lengths longer than short stories. The depth
of historical background, and the ideas needed to sustain a story that ranges far in space and time often requires a fairly large
number of words. In order to make it work at a shorter length, hard SF writers tend to focus in on a single idea. The story
becomes an exploration of that idea, sometimes at the expense of character and style. Alastair Reynolds has made his reputation
as a writer of big, sprawling novels with complex characters, detailed histories, and a dark, almost gothic vision of life's place
in the universe. The stories in Zima Blue at times show the difficulty of cramming the entire cosmos into one short
story, but they also showcase aspects of the author's writing that don't often come out in his novels. There's some humor
here, and even a little romance.

The romance is most evident in "Signal to Noise," the collection's only previously unpublished story. Contact with an
alternate reality brings a man face-to-face with personal loss, his own failings, and the woman his wife might have been. It's
a nice blending of regret, tempered with a small measure of redemption. There's a different kind of romance in the title
story. An artist, revealed to be a machine intelligence, gives up sentience in order to prove his humanity with one last
work of art. The romance here is that of the great sacrifice, giving away all you have in order ton gain the one thing
you always wanted. There's an obvious debt to Asimov's "The Bicentennial Man" here, which Reynolds acknowledges in an
afterword, But, as he also points out, there's more than one way to tell a good story, and "Zima Blue" does exactly that.

The humor in the stories comes at you in little bits and pieces, the occasional odd situation or turn of phrase. A good
example is the re-appearing Bosendorfer grand piano in "Understanding Space and Time," and the reader's knowledge of just
who the guy playing that piano is. It's a style of humor that plays on the absurdity of existence, more prone to inducing
a knowing smile than out loud laughter, but effective just the same, and a welcome touch in stories that often deal
with weightier matters.

For while it may be difficult to write grand space opera in short story form, it's not impossible, and two
linked stories, "Hideaway" and "Merlin's Gun" show just how well it can be done. As the character's name suggests, Reynolds
uses an overlay of references to Arthurian legends to help flesh out a story set against the rise and fall of human and
post-human cultures spanning thousands of generations. Merlin becomes a figure of myth, on a quest to save humanity
and end a war. The scope of these stories is truly cosmic; they would fit well on any hard SF bookshelf, nestled in
between Greg Bear's "Hardfought" and Stephen Baxter's Vacuum Diagrams.

Zima Blue is a good look at a writer whose work is more often than not read in novel form. Readers familiar with
Alastair Reynolds will find much of what they are used to getting, and a little bit more. Readers new to Reynolds will
find the collection a good introduction to a writer whose imagination ranges as far as anyone's in the field, and whose
grounding in science gives his stories a sense of reality that few can match. They should also find plenty of reasons
to go on and read everything else ever written by Alastair Reynolds.

Reviewer Greg L Johnson was contemplating pursuing the path to enlightenment laid out by
John in "Understanding Space and Time," but realized he had to be home for an appointment on Monday.
His reviews also appear in the
The New York Review of Science Fiction.